downpours into tomorrow. jillian: a memorial service for ross perot will be held today in texas. the businessman and two-time presidential candidate passed away last week at age 89. the private service will be streamed online. rob: today house democrats set to vote on a resolution to condemn this twitter feud between the president and the freshmen progressives. jillian: the president refuses to crack down, calling for any member of congress who doesn t love america to leave. lauren blanchard is in washington with new developments. reporter: the four congresswomen dubbed the squad speaking out about president trump after he tweeted the women, all of color, should go back to their, quote, broken and crime infested countries. our squad is big. he does not know how to defend his policies. so what he does is attack us person. this is the agenda of white
together. a key piece of evidence is a rug that was buried with her as police say sparks was caught on surveillance buying a similar one. sparks has pleaded not guilty. the weather situation, several communities are under flash flood warnings as tropical rainstorm barry moves north. officials bracing for up to a half of foot of rain in illinois where certain places are already flooded from rain water. barry is expected to fuel downpours into tomorrow. this as louisiana officials are warning residents to be mindful of bears, snakes and other wildlife temporarily displaced by rising waters. today house democrats are set to vote on a resolution to condemn the twitter rift between president trump around freshmen progressives. as lauren blanchard tells us, the president he refuses to back down, calling again for any member of congress who doesn t love america to leave.
all reach an agreement and it s scuttled by the opponents, all of those other countries are not going to increase the sanctions. and the sanctions will go from being effective because they are universal to unilateral sanctions, which will be ineffective. we can raise the sanctions to the sky as the republicans in congress would like by itself if it s just the united states, they won t be effective. right. the other thing i want to ask you with all the news about the president s attorney general nominee, loretta lynch, mitch mcconnell has not been allowing her a vote. do you think he s out of bounds in his treatment of attorney general nominee loretta lynch? well i think she ll be confirmed, and look let s face it every majority leader of every party had to resort to tactics that don t strike people as quite fair or delaying linking issues. that s what is done by the opponents of the majority party,
clinton battles, which is both sides digging in and moving forward. the clinton people feel they handled this just fine, but it depends a lot on what happens. the other big story, joe clancy from the secret service talking about problems that continue to plague the service. people will look back on this period and say why are there so many problems. let me talk about joe clancy, talking about the alcohol problems among this elite force that protects the president. there is an element within our agency that copes with the stresses that many of you mentioned by using alcohol. there s no question we have that element. we also have other elements in our agency that go a different route. some go to exercise, some go to religion. but we do have an element that goes to alcohol.
it s kind of about being a grownup and being more responsible. sometimes it gives you just enough rope to hang yourself if you re not careful with the way you re putting out a message or the instagram account. but you can do it in far more responsible ways. the republicans can t use that talking point against the president. now the two word answer is aaron schock. every time they do one of these video or selfie campaigns, it ties back to policy. there s a point schock was operating often with a camera and no point. the panel stays, but next we want to dig into john boehner s new tactic against hillary clinton today. the media got that e-mail story all wrong. and how u.s. authorities tracked